Quickly recognising that demand was already outstripping supply, Mr Cowhig was at the door of his supplier’s premises in Cork city early on Tuesday morning as the mop-up following the worst storm in more than 50 years began.

Sean Cowhig

He was extremely lucky, he said, to be able to get 10 new household-quality generators, five of which were immediately purchased by worried customers. The other five were hired equally quickly.

Turning to the North

His Cork city supplier, which normally held 240 generators in stock, was experiencing a similarly high demand, so Mr Cowhig, who received several hundred requests for generators, turned his attention to Northern Ireland. Here another supplier was able to give him 10 more of the machines – but the SOS calls kept on coming.

“We weren’t able to keep up with demand,” said Mr Cowhig. “We were able to provide a number of generators to the farming community, but we didn’t have a sufficient quantity of the larger generators which would be required by any modern milking parlour.”

He added that farmers with large herds were particularly worried, as in some cases their cows had not been milked in 24 hours. “I was very sorry to have to let so many people down – we simply didn’t have enough generators to meet the demand.

“On the domestic side, some people were very worried,” he said. “Their freezers were packed to capacity with food which they were afraid was going off and then you had people with disability, people who were ill, people who were worried about small babies.”

One of those without power for days after the storm was Padraig Keohane, who lives just outside the west Cork village of Rosscarbery. Mr Keohane, a former construction worker who is currently out on disability, ended up eating his meals in Nolan’s, a local bar, showering in the village’s Celtic Ross Hotel and driving to Clonakilty to do his washing in a launderette. But he was pragmatic about the situation: “There are many worse off than me,” he said.